Image provided by: Washington County Cooperative Library Service; Hillsboro, OR
About Washington County hatchet. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1897-1??? | View Entire Issue (Dec. 2, 1897)
PI W A S H IN G T O N IN THE PA TR IO TS * M A N IFE S TO . f In8U «t l •»r t h « ( ’ h I i s i i COUNTY AinzofMKitiKuiv r. iEU JAfî HATCHET. LOVEJOY. C o n s t itu tio n a l ■ Major Shotwell la tnulilicd by a Cto- , I ..... „r mv country; If wifi faff to7rot°ect me I «PP.M * .. I w|tii Hlm I cheerfully rest *my ' cause- This bro, *Ut a re- quest for Lovejoy to resign us editor of the Observer. He did so at once, 1 ut the liaiKT was In debt and the stock “ s turned over to a Mr- Moore, who r ‘,1 y I there again, witn Lovejoy. and .. 1 ^ ^ roll of honor is I lows. Elijah 1. Lovejoy, ffiiadüeu» p Huriburt Royal Weller. James Mon Jr.. Eduiml Breath, J. C. Woods,, it*,, J v a Gerry, Enoch Lang, Samuel ji Thompson. I>. j f . Randall, Amos ij j Hoff. William Harued John ». NohJ Whl my. Winthrop Gilman, George Brown, II. I). Davis, D. Kurt Loomlij Henry Tanner, ( i f this committee q j last one, D. Burt Loomis, passed aw*T at his home iu Minneapolis oue y en i ago. About !> o'clock the mob rounded the warehouse again. The a tack came promptly, accompanied b many shots, t'apt. Long ordered ou- shot fill'd in response. This killed man, and the mob dispersed, but re turned later to the attack with great« fury. An attempt was made to fin* th roof, and during a lull Lovejoy wen out to see If the blaze had taken hold) Then five shots rang out from beldm a woodpile and Lovejoy fell dead. Tha ended tin* trouble. The mob at one retired and no further demonstration was made. Lovejoy was buried tw days later, and by coincidence a ( oreil man dug Ids grave and cared it for years while others knew not eve its location. Later Thomas Dlmmoek a St. Louis Journalist, procured a lot tin* city cemetery, had the relnalns re! moved there and placed upon the grnv the present stone, a scroll oi New K ii gland granite, bearing the words "Here lies Lovejoy. Spare him no that In* Is buried.” In August, 1885, Mr. Dlmmoek transferred by deed t J the colored people of Alton all right title and interest in the lot anil its con tents, anil they are now its legitiniat- ctistoillnns. Such is the history of th man whom tile people of Illinois hav thus commemorated in ltnperishabl stone. History has vindicated his wor and his principles—-the essential pol of which, after all. was based not or abolitionism, but upon the maintenance ¡it all hazards of the right of free speech and the liberty of the Americ press. num en Hear," ' - ’ Assembly. •*:. New York, Nov.' 29.— The ■ Cuban i W e 1 h ar« ou several occuRlons''an THE M O N U M E N T T O HIS MEM. Fear of Starvation Causes (-constitutional uesem-bly, which mrt re- nounced our belief that Muj. Shotwell O R Y A T . A L T O N , ILL. I cejitly at Camagmiy, to remoilel Wie wan Mie moum-Ht erlttei'Jti all 'Arizona, a Stampede. ! oaoutitution and elect anew president« ..»and something happened the olher (lay H is to r y o f T h is R e m a r k a b le M an ’s replaced him in charge, and they de- issued a manifesto, which reached ilio to corroborate all we have said. The', T ig h t A g a in s t th e E v ils o f S la v e r y — ! elded to bring the plant to Alton This office of the Cuban junta iu thin city , Major was.on his way to Loqe Pine, to I'b r ilH n g E v e n ts th a t C u lm in a te d in MAGEE P A R T Y A R R IV E S S A F E L Y today. The document is dated buyaya, dodge his eredltow In tlfls town- for reconsidered, however, and the continued. In April. 183d, a ne H is A s s a s s in a tio n . October 80, 1897, and is signed by awhile, when he ran slap up against a ra* lynched. The Observer de- Domingo Mendez Capote, us president otnnambn bear at the crossing o f Dog the lynching as a disgrace to W it h th e La test N e w » F ro m the In ter« of the assembly. The manifesto is the ! Creek. The bear was hungry enough D ied a M a r ty r . address o f “ The representatives of the i to eat grass, and the Major was so I .Over sixty years iigo, on the night of l o r —T h e i r H a r d J o u r n e y O v e r Cuban people to all those who have in frightened ’ that he made no effort to Nov. 7. 1837, Elijah I*. Lovejoy was the D u ltou T ra il. dependence! auil tiie future welfare of get uwuy, and yet there was no trage shot down in Alton, 111., while with a Port Townsend, Nov. 30.— Twenty- Cuba at heart.” The document says dy. The bear sized him up, rolled him few stanch friends he was defending five men arrived here today on the City the assembly, before adjourning, over two or three times, and then walk ' his printing press against the blind of Seattle, direct from Dawson City. deemed it its duty to proclaim, among ed off In disgust. He didn’t propose to fury of a pro-slavery mob. This is the They were divided into two parties, other things: lower the reputation o f the Bruin fam- incident upon which was based the ap the last of which left Dawson October "T h at no special laws, no form of ily by eating any such specimen o f hu propriation of .$25,0(10 by the Illinois 10. The party consisted of Thomas autonomy; nothing, in short, that tho manity. We have been told that the Legislature for the erection in Alton Magee, sr., Thomas Magee, jr ., of San Spanish government may he willing Major took it as a snub amt feels very of a monument to the memory of the Francisco; “ Kwiftwater B ill” Gates, to grant, that means Spanish sov much cut up over It, and we are glad martyr, the dedication oi which took Joe Boyle, William Hoskins, E. Eckert, ereignty over Cuba, w ill be accepted o f it. He Is a sleek, slick liar, a profes place on the recent anniversary of that H. Robertson, II. Raymond, Bert Nel by Cubans as a settlement of the war. sional dead-beat, and no dec >nt coyote famous tragedy. son, John W. Brauer, W. H. Cham Independence or death shall be the un would bowl over bis grave If he were The man whose brief career is thus bers, E. W. Pond, E. Ash, J. Gillis, alterable and sacred motto of the Cu dead. commemorated In marble and bronze, Thomas Wilson, P. McGraw, Jack Dal bans. . Monday last, when Col. Sage Green Elijah Parish Lovejoy, was born at thc community, and when the *fudge ton, William Leak, Arthur Celine, “ Cubans have not resorted to arms of this town departed for IMlot H ill to Albion. Kennebec, Me., Nov. 8, 1802. of the local court quashed proceedings Joseph Fairburn, J. Smith, T. Warren, in order to obtain any political meas deliver a speech to the citizens o f that lie was the eldest of a family of nine against members of the mob, charac Jim Ferguson, and two others, whose ures which do not, once and for all, town In the Interests of a new rnilroad children, the son of a Congregational terizing tlit* act as "beyond all human names could not be learned tonight. Bolve the Cuban question. That is the we warned him to begin and end with minister. The early years o f liis life law.” his action was In turn attacked Tiiey came out over the Dalton trail. reason we will accept nothing short of the railroad and not wander off to were spent upon the little New En as disgraceful and demoralizing. A They are reported to have between them absolute independence. Christopher Columbus, us we knew he gland farm, and were distinguished few days later the Observer office was $50,000 in dr> fts and gold dust. “ It is our purpose to constitute nn would be quite apt to do. The Colonel only in his abnormal desire for knowl entered and the plant ruined. The press AH tell stories of a food shortage in independent state, orderly, prosperous has a lecture on Columbus, and while edge. His spare time was always occu was not destroyed ami was shipped on Dawson that is almost a famine. The and happy, over the ruins of a worn- never yet Invited to deliver It as a pied In study, and by his own thrift lu> Sunday to Alton. The same night it last person to leave Dawson was Jack out colony. We are firmly determine ! whole, he Is always seeking to work In was enabled to enter the sophomore was wrecked and dumped into the Dalton. When But ton left the steam to carry on the war until victory or a few chapters under some other head. class in W afervllle College in 1823. river. A public meeting followed in ers Alice and Bella hail reached there, death crowns our efforts.” which the people promised to secure We know the Pilot H ill people like a loaded light. It is said that the Bulla’s another outfit for the paper. The pub book. They can stand a good deal of A u t o n o m y a t I .a s t . cargo consisted of whisky and billiard lication of the Observer was resumed balls. She brought no provisions. Madrid, Nov. 29.— The official ga- Gen. Jackson and William Slmkspeare, Sept. 8, 1834». It was uninterrupted but they are down on Christopher Co The Canadian mounted police char ( zette publishes today the royal decrees | until the following August. Lovejoy lumbus and George Washington. The granting autonomy to Cuba and Porto tered the Bella and gave all w ho wished wrote without intermission on the sub free passage to Fort Yukon. The Bella Rico, thus removing tiie anxiety tiiat Colonel thanked us for our caution and ject of slavery, and meantime contin rode gaily away, and that evening he is reported te have loft about October had begun to be expressed on all sides ued his religious work, being modera as the result of the government’s reti- had an audience to make him proud. 12, with 200 men. tor of the Alton Presbytery when he He began on the railroad all right, but According to tho statements made I cence and unexplained delay. died. Article 1 explains the principle of vanity soon switched him off on Co by members of tho Dalton party, there The St. Louis opposition, however, is liable to lie trouble of the most seri- 1 the future government of the two lumbus, and three minutes later he was soon manifested itself there, ami on Article 2 decrees that the flying for his life. lie reached here ous kind this winter in Dawson. B illy islands. »VK.IOV. July 11, 1837, a public meeting pro Leak told one of the men in the party government of each island shall he Wednesday, after lying in the woods where lie graduated with . onor three tested against tin* course of the paper thirty-six hours, and a more lonesome ahead of him at Dyea that all the peo- 1 composed of an insular parliament, di A N C IE N TS V A LU E D GOLD. years later. He then taught school a and appointed a committee to intercede jile talked about at Dawson was the vided into two chambers, while a gov- and bedraggled object was never seen. few years, but was seized with the with Lovejoy. He received the delega His first act was to tear up his address ! ernor-general, representing the home A n t i q u e M in in a Im p le m e n ts Discov food famine. Men wore gathered in mania for migration to the West, and tion politely, but in cold disdain of ered N e a r th e R ed Sen. groups, and cursing might and main | governinment, shall exercise in its on Columbus, and his next to get drunk, tin'll* mission. The trouble culminated landed in St. Louis in 1827. Here he Gold was probably the first metal o! the newcomers that were constantly en I name the supreme authority. Article and we have strong hopes that he will began writing for the local press. His as usual. The plant was totally de served anil collected, because of the I tering the Klondike witli scarcely any 3 declares that the faculty of making get some sense Into his head as he so first newspaper work was done as an stroyed on the night of Aug. 21. The stlnctive understanding of Its intrinsic bers up. Every town lias its idioms, laws for colonial affairs rests with tho provisions. attache of the St. Louis Times, which same night a committee of vigilantes value. About It su|M*rstition* grew, re Tho mounted police were offering insular chambers and the governor- and they should be respected. Here at advocated tlie election of Henry Clay waylaid Lovejoy on a lonely road and ligious and ceremonious rites am free transportation to the grub piles general. Article 4 directs that the in Giveailam Gulch we are down on to the Presidency. He had a seemingly informed him that they had decided strange crimes were committed for it: Slmkspeare ami up on Columbus, but sular representation shall be composed futher down tho Yukon, hut to count brilliant opening here, but during a re lie was a nuisance in the community possession In the days when it was Is* less hundreds who had labored hard all of two cor|snations, with equal power, if the Pilot Hill peoplBare the other ligious revival that followed the elec- and proposed to tar and feather and through the summer accumulating a a chamber of representatives and a way their feelings should be consulted lieved that it was of such stuff that the grubstake, tho prospect was uninviting (council of administration. Article 5 instead of outraged. sun itself was made and the balls o When Mr. John Graham of Chicago to say the least. These men figured proviiles that the council of adminis Valhalla paved, ltoek paintings am that it would take all their savings in tration shall consist of 36 members, of arrived here last week to see about in carvings of Egyptian tombs earlie gold to pay their living expenses at whom 18 shall bo elected and 17 nomi- troducing electric lighting for the pub than the days of Joseph indicate tin:, lic streets we plainly told him that we Fort Yukon during the winter, and tiateil by the home government. operation of washing auriferous sand, Article 0 provides that members of didn't believe our people would stand that in tiie spring they would not have and a subsequent melting in furnaqt even enough gold left to pay passage the council must he Spaniards 35 years It. Tallow candles and kerosene oil by the aid of blow pipes. Less tha money back to Dawson, to say nothing of age, who have resided in Cuba con have been used ever since the first light ! twenty years ago the old mines was hung out, and no one has ever tinuously for four years. It specifies of purchasing enough food to subsist Nubln, so graphically described until they oouid get started again. To numerous officials, such as senators, heard any complaints. ..ir. Graham tie- i Dimlorous. were rediscovered on thtJ these poor fellows the offer of the presidents of courts and of chambers of elded to give an exhibition of Ills arc- shores of the Red Sea, together with : light and let the people judge for them- I commerce and other bodies as eligible mounted police was no better than tile line of ancient wells across the desert prospect at Dawson of being compelled to election to the council. Article 7 tc selves, and the display took place Wed the underground workings where ore to winter on hull' rations until the sup 14 deal with nominations and the con nesday evening in front of the city hall. ( veins had been followed with the pick ply boats could reach tho diggings in ditions of election to councils. Article The boys were so quiet for the first the rude cupelling furnaces for assay 15 empowers tho throne or the gover five minutes thnt we began to lie hope the spring. lug, picks, oil lamps, stone mills, mor John W. Brauer, the United States nor-general to convoke, suspend or dis ful, but then old Jim Hewsen began to ( tars ¡mil pestles. Inclined warming ta mail-oarrier, who left Dawson Septem solve the chambers, with un obligation .veil and away she went. It seemed as tiles of stone, crucibles and retortln; to reassemble them within three if fifty pistols were popping at once, ber 27, said: furnaces of burned tile, by which th months. and of course It didn't take long for “ There is only one salvation for the entire process could lie traced. thnt arc-light to grow wings and fly miners who are now at Dawson City, Here slaves ¡mil hapless prisoner: CHEERED FOR AMERICA. away. When it had disappeared the and that is for them to undertake the of war exchanged their life blood fo tion he embraced tin* Presbyterian set him adrift on the river. He lis boys turned their attention to Mr. Gra awful winter trip from Dawson to Fort riMonvrn I t r o u g l i t o n » R i o t Yukon, a distance of 400 miles. There ham. and the last we Heard of him he faith, and his purpose in life was sud tened calmly, and then said: “ Gentle glittering dust to fill the treasuries o In P o r t o K i c o . was seven miles west of the town and denly changed. He entered tin* Prince men. 1 am in your hands, with neither their captors. In India and Ash is food at Fort Yukon; there is none at still on the go. W e trust he Is satisfied ton Theological Seminary iu 1832, and the power nor the disposition to resist. Minor the powdered ore was washed Dawson, and just as sure as the stars Havana, Nor. 29.— Advices from shine, terrible suffering will be the Porto Rico say a riot occurred there with Ills experiment. Our people didn’t was licensed to preach a year Inter by I have, however, one quest to make. down over smooth, sloping rocks anilj fate of the Dawson miner unless he yesterday. It appears that a steamer mean him any harm, but It’s just their the Philadelphia Presbytery. Return My w ife is dangerously ill and I was gold caught in the fleeces of sheepskins It was literally leaves there before spring. 1 will having on hoard a number of (Kilitical way. W e'll be in the swim with Chi ing, however, to St. Louis, lie was as on my way to town to have a prescrip sunk in the stream. make my statement conservative, and prisoners, recently released from the cago some day, but Just at present our sisted by friends in tin* founding of a tion tilled. I f one of you will pledge a golden fleece thnt Jason brougb say that when I left Dawson the men Spanish penal settlement on the A fri affection for candles and kerosene is weekly newspaper, which he called the his word to take it and have the medi back from flit* Caucasus. Further who were there had on an average four can coast, in accordance with the am too strong to be broken by any sudden St. Louis Observer. The first number cine prepared and deliver it at my north and following the eastern foot-j appeared Nov. 22, 1833. house without lotting my wife know hills of Mount Ararat to the southern months’ food supply. Some did not nesty decree, arrived there, and the wrench. The slavery question was then agi what has become of me you may do s ! o | h * of the T’ ral mount.11 ns in It us have a mouths’ supply; some had four liberated men were allowed to land. A (iiM iif R e p ly . tating tin* community, ami it was im with me what you wish.” There*was stan Siberia, where last year million or five. They soon found their way to a drink During the Apache war In Arizona possible for a man of bis pmsltlve con profound silence for a moment, and were taken out of the old mines, the “ The last restaurant closed the night ing saloon, partook of stimulants and 1 left. It had been selling nothing hut began cheering for tho United States, In 18tit> a Maricopa Indian—the Mari victions to keep still on such a vital then the leader said: "Boys. I can't ancient Scythians broke up rock and copa* are an agricultural tribe living subject. During the summer of 1834 lie touch him. He Is too brave a man." gravel with copper Implements, scrap beefsteak, for which the hungry paid crying: on the banks of the Gila—rode a hun formally announced Ills opposition to And he was allowed to go in peace. On ed out the glittering dust and nuggets 92.80. "Hurrah for free Amerioa. ” dred miles between sun and suu to the whole system of slavery, and there Si i»t. 21. another press arrived. It was with the fangs o f wild boars, and car “ When the people realized that no This demonstration was resented by more boats would be tip the river, they the crowds about the place, and rioting warn a party of well-to-do emigrants by began his troubles. His editorials destroyed the same night. Then Love- ried their gain away In bags of leather. knew tiiat starvation threatened them, followed. The police were called upon that the Apaches had planned to am soon began to I k * talked about, yet they joy thought of removing either to St. All through this region miners of to would read as very mild utterances to Charles. Mo., or to Quincy. But he was day know that one o f the chief dangers and the great stampede began. The to interfere, and compelled the liber buscade them at a certain pass. The young Indian volunteered to day. They are significant also in thnt not dis|M»sed to run away from trouble, to he avoided are the Seythmn pits, first to leave went to Fort Yukon. I ated men to re-embark. During the think there were 200 iu the party tiiat disturbance, the police arrested the in guide the wagons by another route and they prove that Lovejoy was not an nml on the advice of friends he re sixty feet deep in the gravel, and when he had done this he mouuted his abolitionist. He said in his own eol- mained and ordered a new press. surgent, Colonel A 1 i posanchea. left the first day. shaped like a well. The remains of umus; “ Gradual emancipation Is the “ One boat came up from Fort Yukon Senor Marcos Garcia, the governor of horse to go home. in anticipation of its arrival another thousands of small furnaces of burn “ Hee here,” said the leader o f the remedy we proimse. This we look up public meeting was held, with the ob ed clay testify to the long period over with several newspapermen aboard, Santa Clara, lias arrived at Sagua, in among them being Sam Wall and Mr. order to be better able to judge of the train, to the young Maricopas, “ you on as the only feasible and. Indeed, the ject of persuading the editor to take which the workings o f the mines ex McGilivra. They brought tiie news condition of thereconcentradoes. From have done us a good service. What is only desirable way o f effecting our tended.- Modern Machinery. freedom from the thralldom in which tiiat tiie Hamilton had unloaded all of tliis day, these unfortunate people w ill your price?” A Load o f Ants. “ My price?” repented the astonish we are held. In the meantime the her cargo and tried to get over tiie bar receive rations. When a vessel recently arrived in rights of nil classes of our citizens light and failed ip her efforts, though The Spanish authorities today re ed Indian. Liverpool with a cargo of logwood, "That is what I asked.” should lie respected, anil the work l >- she drew but two feet of water. This leased from prison Thomas J. Jordan, everybody on lioard, from captain (low “ I linve no price. Had gain been my posed, carried on and finished as one news increased the excitement, and a prisoner captured, according to the to cook, rushed frantically ashore, as made the rush toward food centers all allegations, after the landing of an ex object I would have joined the In which nil classes are alike interest though pursued Ly some unseen enemy. the greater pedition by the American schooner Apache* ami met you In the pass.” And ed, and in which all may 1»' called up As a matter of fact, the vessel was lit "September 14, with Bert Nelson, of Three Friends, and Emanuel Hernan so saying the brave wheeled his horse on to make sacrifices o f individual In erally swarming with hordes of hungry Seattle, I left Circle City, ami started dez, who is said to have been a mem and rode proudly away. terests to the general welfare of the Jamaica nnts. to pole up the river to Dawson City, a ber of another filibustering expedition. community.” On another occasion he ¡sh attered H opes. The little pests had invaded the look 'distance of 300 miles. At the time we Botli men were under sentence ot said that emancipation should lie ef “ Ah,” sighed Mr. Rloodgood, “ I had started from Cirolo Cit , the miners death. The government has also re ers and dived headlong Into the sugar fected "by the masters and no others." hoped that John would grow up to be ha»l about all left. It took oa 11 days leased from prison Juan Aris, Augus barrels. A fter unish,ng the c o n t e n t s He hated slavery, but appreciated the and three hours to make the journey, tine Cosaio, Emil Betancourt and Ro- n credit to us and thnt some day I could jiosition and feeling of the slavehold of these, they proceeded to Imre holes transfer my business cares to his shoul arriving at Dawson September 26. sendo Betancourt. ers. and frequently stated that*It was through the supply o f hard tack, ami ders. But that dream is past. I shall Captain Hanson, with two Indians, a national and not a sectional evil. Yet ate everything liefore them, until it was have to look around for some one else Baker City, Or., Nov. 29.— A fata’ w ho had loft Fort Yukon, beat us into even this line of argument was bitter feared that the stock of provisions on Dawson by almut an hour and a half. accident occurred last evening at the who can become the active member of ly resented, anil under uate of Oct. 5, Imard would run short. There was “ Hanson gathered tiie Dawson City Elkhorn-Bonanza mine. In some un the firm. I can never trust my business 1835. a letter was sent to him by a com cessation from t.ieir ui.neks when the in John's hands now.” accountable manner James Cage! ignit miners together and made a short mittee of 8t. Louis citizens command vessel was caught In a West India hur “ Why.” exclaimed Mrs. Bloodgood. epei*ch, in which he advised all who ed some giant prowder, and the whole ing that be cease talking o f slavery in ricane. which tlisMled the cabin ami did not havfc provisions to last them magazine exploded with a force which "what on earth Is the matter?” his paper. He refused flatly and in an drenched everything tielow. It was “ lie writes me that be hns just been editorial said: “ The free communica all winter to either get out of the almost jarred the mountain. The un supimaed that the intruders had all country to civilization or try and reach fortunate miner was killed as if struck elected class |>oet. Maria, sometimes tion o f thoughts and opinions is one of •men drowned, tint after the storm had 'l O S t 'Z K X T O F 1 .0 V K .IO T . (siints in tiie Yukon country where it by a lightning bolt, his body being this seems to be almost more than I the inalienable rights of man. and any passed away they began again with re mangled in a frightful manner. Thos. can bear.” was known that foo 1 could lie found. person may freely speak, write or print a new course. Then newed energy. it was that he “ That night was the greatest one in Hopkins was painfully though not fa on any subject, being responsible for made his dying Celandine for Cancer. The captain who commands the ves declaration, which tiie history o f Dawson City The tally injured. In the elos- rings vet ns th e l -..,— - ... sel stated thnt there are millions of he Dr. Denisenko, a Russian physician, the abuse of that liberty miners, as soon as they had heard the * nd insects still on Imard, and he thought has discovered that a fluid extract of ing paragraph he thus declared him j of American Independent Frankfort, Ky., Nov. 29.— Following “ Bnt. gen- news, made busty preparations to get that the cargo must have come from the great celandine iclielidoniutn ma- I self: “ I do, therefore, as an American | tlemen. as long as i out, and nightfall saw gohlseekera and the requests of the hoards of trade and Jus), administered internally or by hy- citizen and Christiau iiatrlot. in the i citiso»» „ „ i ”• " a,u an American the vicinity o f ant hills for which the Commercial Club of Louisville, ' an'' a!' lonK » » American blood men who can today sell out for thou- 1 podermte injection, is a cure for can name o f liberty, law and religion, sol tese veins. s.ish * * c" * hobt mvself Jamaica is roted. He stated that the ru n sin tm .sevem sands, leaving by the hundreds for come numerous letters urging Governor cer. This Is a new application o f an emnly protest against all these at at liberty V to speak, to Write, to publish ants were In all parts o f the vessel, am* Bradley to appoint his daughter, Miss down the river and up the river.” tempts. however and by whomsoever whatever 1 1 please on any subject !>,* that in all his experience at sea he had Christine, who is now in school in old remedy, medical writers as far made, to frown down the liberty of the hack as 1491 speaking of celandine az ng amenable to the laws of ¿ ,,,lln never before met with an attack lit® Washington, D. C., to christen the Montevideo, Nov. 30.— A monster a cure for »D e e r, and a work publish press and forbid the free expression of the newcomers waged against him. ^ « the fourth meeting of native Uruguayans and for- | new battle-ship Kentucky. While it ed in 164 4 describing it as correcting opinion. Under n deep sense of my ob „ Brri'e»l and was placed In the is somewhat embarrassing for the gov ligations to my country, the church and eignera was held in favor of the can- ( A Theory. vile and pernicious bodily humors. warehouse of Godfrey A Gilman . “ What do you think o f the escape j da lacy of Honor Cucstaa for the preai- ; ernor to coufer the honor on a member my God. I declare it to be my fixed pur successfully defended tha" nigh; of his own family, it is quite likely A girl never tries to extinguish the pose to submit to no dictation. And I Miss Cisneros from that Spanish pri®* His opponents interfered, and tumult ensued, in which several that he w ill comply with tbeae popular ; spark «a long as s man baa mousy to am prepared to abide by the conae- vT-JV't, uü'” w.hi* o s r - r on requests. burn. “ I think some of oar ex- police me* | I I X * K""" -- -